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So just how much of the U.S. does China own? (Read 1123 times)
vikaryan
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So just how much of the U.S. does China own?
Mar 6th, 2015 at 11:59am
 
How Much Of The U.S. Does China Own?
 

China owns around 1.3 trillion dollars of the United States' debt, but recently Chinese nationals have been heavily investing in different sectors of US economy. So, how much of the US does China own?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKPjhDYvkfg


China has no illusions about the strength of the U.S. dollar and is actively dumping the dollar and acquiring real assets.


Quote:
China owns Australia too. From the very small businesses, to grand farms sweeping hundreds of kilometers, and enormous factories and distributor companies. Apparently the same with New Zealand.

What's the plan? How can this be so.


By: sass

Quote:
While Russia is fighting the Empire of Chaos more openly (though the US doesn't give it much choice), China has been doing it silently behind the scenes, in the economic sector. It'll be fun if one day they'll decide to just pull the plug.


By: Mandatory Intellectomy

Quote:
. . . China can't pull our plug without collapsing themselves. They first need to take drastic action to insulate their economy from ours; they are trying, but they are not there yet, and probably won't be for quite a while.

In any event, they really don't have to pull our plug: our own corrupt gov't is doing a damn fine job of rapidly marching this country to collapse without any foreign gov'ts being involved.


By: sottreader

http://www.sott.net/article/293312-So-just-how-much-of-the-US-does-China-own

Quote:
How can you compete with a country that enslaves it's whole population of a billion people?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKPjhDYvkfg&google_comment_id=z12yvfhrtyqwhdtwr04ch1tyoq2vhxkrfns0k

Quote:
China's economy has been called everything positive over the years; I call it a timebomb. It is like the roaring 20's there, but when the boom goes bust all hell will break loose. There will be a thousand Tiananmen Squares, and the Chinese Communist Party will cease to exist.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKPjhDYvkfg&google_comment_id=z13ajfxyxzfwdviiu04cgrnzbmvpvldh1sc0k
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vikaryan
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Re: So just how much of the U.S. does China own?
Reply #1 - Mar 6th, 2015 at 12:14pm
 
vikaryan wrote on Mar 6th, 2015 at 11:59am:
How Much Of The U.S. Does China Own?
 

Quote:
China's economy has been called everything positive over the years; I call it a timebomb. It is like the roaring 20's there, but when the boom goes bust all hell will break loose. There will be a thousand Tiananmen Squares, and the Chinese Communist Party will cease to exist.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKPjhDYvkfg&google_comment_id=z13ajfxyxzfwdviiu04cgrnzbmvpvldh1sc0k


China will collapse in the near future

Anonymous Sat 03 May 2014 22:59:06 No.29556640

1. Their aging baby boom means a substantial slowdown followed by stagnation and then a slide backwards.

2. It's entirely possible their agricultural juggernaut will fall when one of two things happens; either the food becomes so tainted with pollutants it is no longer edible, or it is tainted enough so the developed world refuses to import it- there goes a large chunk of their economy.

3. Increasing separatism and nationalism among tibetans, islamic west Chinese groups, and also rising separatism among christians and religious buddhists could cause civil strife.

4. Their ability to maintain North Korea as a cheap source of minerals is tenuous at best- and Japan is currently poised to begin extracting the same minerals as sludge from the sea floor at a fraction of the cost that even dirt cheap Nork minerals can be obtained, because the Japanese won't need to mine it directly.

5. China runs on coal- and its coal comes mainly from Africa, but these coal seams will eventually run out.

6. Ghost cities, dead bonds, and a shrinking pool of investment opportunities as India begins to slowly replace them as the choice of the west for cheap manufacturing.

All the West has to do is to stoke a 'revolution' inciting the minorities like Uyghurs and Tibetans plus feed the flames of wide discontent and highest income disparity anywhere in the world.

http://archive.4plebs.org/pol/thread/29556640/#29556640

http://archive.4plebs.org/pol/search/image/7T3qbOeEpl8HluMAs9qa6g/
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vikaryan
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Re: So just how much of the U.S. does China own?
Reply #2 - Mar 9th, 2015 at 6:25am
 
Chinese Investment Around the World


Daily Reckoning - Australian Edition-17 Feb 2015

I tried to highlight on Saturday the amount of Chinese capital flowing into the UK property sector. I only had to open the paper yesterday to see how much is flowing into Australia, too.

Perhaps you heard the news? The Australian Financial Review reported ‘Hong Kong-listed property giant R&F Properties has agreed to buy a Brisbane riverfront site for more than $80 million, greater than four times what DEXUS Property Group sold it for 18 months ago, in another sign of Chinese appetite.’

Talk about capital growth!

The purchase isn’t quite over the line yet, but there’s been such a string of these deals we can see the trend clearly in place. As the AFR points out, with the Aussie dollar down 25% in eighteen months, Aussie property looks cheaper to foreign money than it does for any of us.

Of course, foreign money means mostly Chinese money. And Chinese money is going all over the world right now. According to American research firm The Heritage Foundation (as reported by Business Insider), China’s foreign investments abroad were $870 billion at the end of last year.

By the way, the bigger the red dot, the bigger the investment figures. You can see the US and Australia loom large, with Canada a bit behind for the top 3.

Africa, the UK and the Middle East don’t look too shabby either. It seems to me that China is securing resources all over the world. It does make me wonder how long before Chinese troops start appearing in far flung parts of the world to protect these investments. Military bases have a habit of following pipelines.

As you can see, in our part of the world, there’s more money going into metals and energy projects here than Australian real estate. Having said that, rising land values and rents are showing up in the share market.

On Monday, property trust Generation Healthcare reported earnings were up 78%, and it enjoyed a $4.8 million boost in property revaluations.

Another stock I like to watch is BWP Trust. It’s basically the landlord to the Bunnings Warehouse chain. It reported its profit was up 14.6% on its $1.9 billion portfolio.

If we broaden out the scope to the wider market, you can see the property sector is starting to lift.

Mind you, we’re a long way from the giddy days of 2006/7. That’s why I think there’s plenty of room for this to run yet.

All this is perfectly in accord with the movement of our property clock over at Cycles, Trends and Forecasts. The clock actually tells you how the economy will move…long before the events come to pass.

For example, the next phase we’re looking for over in the US is a rapid expansion in new construction. Of course, for that to happen, people need to be able to afford to buy in. That hasn’t been easy over in the US in the wake of the subprime debacle that brought on what the Americans call the ‘Great Recession’.

So it was with interest I saw this from USA Today…

Quote:
‘US makes it easier to buy first home

‘New policies — including lower down payment requirements, decreased mortgage insurance premiums and looser lending standards — are intended to make it easier for first-time like Mr Eddleman to get a loan…

‘Easier access to credit will be one factor in getting first-time home buyers into the market. A bigger factor may be that Millennials are settling down. “The pure demographics [of Millenials overtaking Baby Boomers as the nation’s largest generation] are going to increase the number of first time buyers in the market.”’


This will soon put the American banks back into the profitable business of financing property. That’s basically what banks all over the world exist to do. They’ve left businesses to raise money from the share and bond markets these days.

This trend’s been 100 years in the making.

The Economist reported on this in late January.

Here’s the key quote: ‘Since the 1970s virtually the entire increase in the ratio of private-sector debt to GDP around the world has been caused by rising levels of mortgage lending.’

What? Aren’t we Westerners nothing but a bunch of spendthrift consumers who cannot be trusted to contain ourselves within a five mile radius of a shopping centre? Don’t our Depression-era forefathers look down upon us from the heavens and shake their head at our profligacy?

Actually no. We just need more debt to buy into the property market. All the banks ask is that you pledge your lifetime earnings in advance.

Banks of course get a higher return on property loans than they do on business loans because the regulatory rules state they have to hold less capital against a property loan. The study the Economist referencessays banks actually resemble ‘real estate funds’ who borrow short (deposits) to lend long (property loans).

That is to say, our money on deposit is hostage to the banks’ property portfolios. That’s ok for now; it’s when the boom really gets going that the worries will start to kick in…

We’ve all become slaves to the banks. The ruling elite don’t want you to know this of course. 

http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/chinese-investment-around
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